English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

This Person Sign Up For 4 Years And 12 Months, Been In For 3 Years But Is Tryin To Get Out Now Because Says That Military Isnt For Him, Has Been Getting In Trouble So He Can Get Out

2007-10-11 22:59:05 · 8 answers · asked by nell 1 in Politics & Government Military

8 answers

Can't really do anything to get out of a military contract because a person decides that the military isn't for them. At least get out with an Honorable or General Discharge anyway. If he keeps getting in trouble to get out then the best he could hope for is a discharge Under Other Than Honorable Conditions. But more realistic is him getting a Bad Conduct Discharge or Dishonorable. If you get any of those three on your record your going to have a tough time getting a job, and if it's the Dishonorable you can forget it. He won't even be able to get a job flipping burgers. The best thing he can do is tough it out until the end of his contract and leave the military honorably.

2007-10-11 23:56:29 · answer #1 · answered by wrfd786 2 · 2 0

4 Years and 12 months? That's 5 years. He's been in for 3 years and just finding out military isn't for him? Right.

He needs to suck it up and finish his enlistment. Why? Because he signed a contract.

And getting in trouble will not get you out. It will only make the last two years comletely miserable. And if he DOES do something bad enough to get kicked out, that DISHONORABLE DISCHARGE will not look so good on the ole' resume. Not even McDonalds will hire him with that on his permenant record.

Tell him to suck it up, be a man, and finish what he started.

P.S. You really shouldn't capitalize every single word in a sentence, makes you look childish.

2007-10-11 23:09:39 · answer #2 · answered by ? 5 · 2 0

and that's the WORSE thing he can do. he can lose all he veteran's benefits that way, including his GI Bill and VA programs.

There is no early out 2 years out. absolute earliest is six months, and he must already be accepted and enrolled in college full time.

he has already done 3 years. two more should be easy. He signed a contract, he needs to honor it. That extra year was for a bonus, or higher paygrade or something. If he tries to weasel out now, he forfeits that.

2007-10-12 03:01:18 · answer #3 · answered by Mrsjvb 7 · 0 0

Brillant. Sounds like a punk that will get what they want eventually. They will have to go to Captain's Mast a few times and then they will be kicked out with a bad conduct discharge. That will earn them a really messed up life for the rest of their life. All VA GI Bill benefits will be taken from them. If they want to go to college of any kind they better have the cash to pay for it all on their own because they will not be eligible for ANY federally backed students loans which is nearly all loan programs. They are also kept from all grants and scholarships for school. Any job they may be thinking about is probably not going to happen either because nobody wants someone who gets kicked out of the Navy for bad conduct working for them. They are also banned from any government jobs and any goverment contract jobs. Your friend sounds like a true winner who will be living at home living off his family for the rest of their life. Why don't you tell them to grow up suck it up and finish their obligation.

2007-10-12 03:13:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i at present retired by way of scientific . Your community PSD will do the AUDIT . many times it takes 8 days to end . Mine took 9 days . Now in the journey that your community PSD does no longer end the audit interior 20 days DFAS then takes over and does it . It many times takes as much as 40 5 days after the community PSD.

2016-11-08 02:14:24 · answer #5 · answered by datta 4 · 0 0

he should have thought of that within the first 6 months of his enlistment. much to the dismay of many people you can get a general discharge ( can never be converted to honorable, though) through something called " failure to adapt." i knew a sailor who did that. but, thats not much help to him, since hes been in longer than 6 months. i guess you could always fail pt tests.

2007-10-12 03:02:19 · answer #6 · answered by jeweldon 1 · 0 0

Should have thought of that before he/she joined, its not a job at Mcdonalds, you can't just walk in and quit.

2007-10-11 23:17:09 · answer #7 · answered by redlegman64 3 · 0 0

Nope, better suck it up and drive on.

2007-10-11 23:02:04 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 2 0

fedest.com, questions and answers